BleedGopher
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 62,778
- Reaction score
- 20,196
- Points
- 113
Brewster did nothing to earn respect from the fans. He was at best a delusional bumpkin; convinced of his own greatness through good old Central Texas hyperbolic osmosis. He was at worst a thief; calculating in his pilferage of a university too drenched in its own self-loathing to recognize the painfully apparent low-brow heist happening on its own watch.
Any ongoing aspersions of his tenure should be met with knowing approval.
...and the corpse of Tim Brewster is pummeled yet again, brought into a discussion where it had no place.
Technically, Brewster is still getting paid by the U thru the 2013 season, so that makes him fair game. And 2013 is about how long it will take Kill to clean up the mess Timmy left. I'll quit ripping on Brewster if he foregoes the $200K/yr the U is paying him, or donates it to charity.
Brewster did nothing to earn respect from the fans. He was at best a delusional bumpkin; convinced of his own greatness through good old Central Texas hyperbolic osmosis. He was at worst a thief; calculating in his pilferage of a university too drenched in its own self-loathing to recognize the painfully apparent low-brow heist happening on its own watch.
Any ongoing aspersions of his tenure should be met with knowing approval.
So how do you REALLY feel?
That's new. Do you have a source for the payments through 2013?
http://espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/29935/a-look-at-tim-brewsters-contract-situation
That's why I used the term "technically" in my post. Although I may have been a little off on whether the U is still paying him, he did get 1/2 his salary thru '13 if I read this right. If he returns all that scratch I'll only post nice things about Brewster from now on.
It wouldn't make much sense to do it that way as the contract is over at point of termination. Usually, buyouts (in either direction), are due when the contract ends.
Your statement is just not accurate or true. Most executive contracts have termination language that gives the terminated employee payments that can last several years or even more. Part of the reason for this is to decrease the tax consequences of the payments, part is to better manage the organization’s cash flow, and part of this is to assure that the terminated employee will have a predictable income stream for a period of time. They are not called "Golden Parachute" for nothing.
I am always amazed that people will write things here as facts or the truth without really understanding what the facts are and how things work.
Your statement is just not accurate or true. Most executive contracts have termination language that gives the terminated employee payments that can last several years or even more. Part of the reason for this is to decrease the tax consequences of the payments, part is to better manage the organization’s cash flow, and part of this is to assure that the terminated employee will have a predictable income stream for a period of time. They are not called "Golden Parachute" for nothing.
I am always amazed that people will write things here as facts or the truth without really understanding what the facts are and how things work.
Since you believe my opinion to be untrue, please explain why, when the original salary was $800,000 per year and the buyout is $600,000, it would make sense to you to make $200,000 payments for three years.
.............
I am always amazed that people will write things here as facts or the truth without really understanding what the facts are and how things work.
Brewster did nothing to earn respect from the fans. He was at best a delusional bumpkin; convinced of his own greatness through good old Central Texas hyperbolic osmosis. He was at worst a thief; calculating in his pilferage of a university too drenched in its own self-loathing to recognize the painfully apparent low-brow heist happening on its own watch.
Any ongoing aspersions of his tenure should be met with knowing approval.
lol that was the whisky talking.